A MAJOR mobile and broadband provider is hiking bills within weeks. Some of EE's 25million customers will see prices rise by as much as £48 a year. From March bills will be higher because firms are allowed to increase prices mid-contract. Some EE customers will see a set hike of £1.50 on their monthly mobile bill (£18 a year) if they are SIM-only, or £4 a month on certain plans that include handsets - £48 a year more.
![[EE logo displayed on a smartphone screen.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/r73yg5-logo-mobile-phone-network-925385335.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
Prices for some broadband customers will increase by £3 a month, which is £36 more annually, while EE TV customers will have to pay an extra £2 a month, or £24 a year more. Others will have a percentage increase applied, meaning how much more they pay will depend on how much their bill is now. The pounds and pence price rise will apply to those who took out a contract after April 1, 2024. That's because new rules brought in by the regulator mean that providers should hike bills by a fixed "pounds and pence" amount to make it clearer for customers.
Contracts taken out before this date will still have percentage rises applied. The percentage is based on a rate of 3.9% plus the inflation rate for December. Inflation for that month was confirmed in January as 2.5%. That means bills will rise by 6.4%. A mobile deal currently costing £17 a month will increase by £1.09 to £18.09, or by £13.08 a year. On a £36 a month contract it's an increase of £2.30 a month, taking it to £38.30, or £27.60 a year.
Meanwhile broadband contracts costing £27.99 and £34.99 a month will rise by £21.48 and £26.88 a year respectively. EE add-ons such as packages of extra minutes, text or data. will also increase by 5%. Customers on certain tariffs will be exempt from any rises. EE Basics, which is a social tariff, will continue to cost £12 a month. These are cheaper deals designed for those in low incomes and benefits like Universal Credit and Pension Credit and have no exit fees.
The new rules from Ofcom on fixed amount price rises officially came in to force from January 17 this year. But many providers got ahead of the rules and announced the amounts last year. The change was brought in to make it clearer to customers how much more they will pay each year when taking out a contract. In previous years rises linked to inflation meant that customers were hit by huge unexpected hikes.
From March 31, here's how much more EE customers will pay:. Contracts taken out after April 10, 2024. Contracts taken out before April 10, 2024. Mobile and broadband add-ons. Out of bundle charges. *Customers who took out new handset plan contracts between April 10 and September 9, 2024 will pay £1.50 more a month, or £18 a year. To see how much your bill will rise by check your bill, log in to your account, or go to: ee.co.uk/help/billing-payments/guide-to-bill/about-annual-prices-changes.
When inflation hit a 41-year high in October 2022 some customers saw their bills rise by up to a staggering 17.4%. As inflation has fallen back it means that rises are not as high. But exclusive analysis by The Sun found that the pounds and pence rises in some cases work out to increases of as much as 15% - more than the 6.4% rise for inflation-linked older bills this year. EE customers are being notified of the increase now ahead of the new prices coming in from March 31.
It's not just EE hiking prices in April as a handful of providers are telling customers of increases. Here's what we know so far... BT, which also owns EE and Plusnet, said that from March 2025, the price of mobile contracts will rise by £1.50 a month (SIM-only) or £4 (handset plans). Broadband tariffs will go up by £3 a month and £2 for TV. But, the provider has assured vulnerable customers on BT Home Essentials contracts that they will be exempt from any price rises.
The pounds and pence rise will apply to contracts taken out from April 10, 2024. For those who took out a deal before this, a 6.4% rise will apply (3.9% and January's inflation rate, which was 2.5%). Plusnet will also increase its broadband price by £3 per month from the end of March for contracts taken out after July 11, 2024. For contracts started prior to this date, a 6.4% hike will apply. Vodafone mobile phone customers will see their bills rise by £1.80 a month while Home Broadband customers will see prices hiked by £3.
These pounds and pence rises will apply to contracts taken out after July 2, 2024. For bills prior to this date an inflation linked price rise of 3.9% plus January's inflation figure will apply. This rate is due to be announced on February 19. The new prices will apply from April 1. Vodafone has said that price increases will not be applied to customers who are identified as financially vulnerable or those on social tariffs.